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Hi. Thank you. Let me correct something what I said by saying that I didn't write a post on this topic (content) a few days ago but I am sure that I wrote it yesterday in your General Vocabulary & Idiom Questions section.
Anyway,
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Hello Vctory Ong, I enjoyed reading your essay, I think you're an imaginative writer who is skilled at making the place you are describing seem real. Here are some of the errors I noticed in your essay.
We enjoys, they dances, jogs...
ESL Essay, Writing World
by
ben777
85 days ago
Essays, Tenses, Nouns, Articles, Past Tenses, Definite Articles, Friendships, Writing, Mistakes, Speaking, Chat, Languages, Adjectives, Indefinite, Numbers
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Hii, I have a question related to this that nagged me for some time in the past and that I forgot ... until I saw this thread. I know that there's a special word order when we have as - how - so - too , the indefinite article, a noun and an
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Yes, it's correct. We use such as an adverb intensifier. It gives emphasis to an adjective.
As an adverb, "such" can precede an adjective. It can also precede "a" or "an" - indefinite articles - and an
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This often happens when people are speaking extemporaneously, without a printed text from which to read. It becomes, in effect, a sort of "articulated pause + indefinite article". I have every confidence that he knows the difference
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Hi. None of those are correct. An and a are indefinite articles which should be put before a noun , not before an adjective. A hydrodynamic cap, a hydrodynamic compression .....
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The countable sweat is an idiom, using the indefinite article. Perhaps someday it will become a word. Regarding the adjective "idiomatic," any usage which correctly contains an idiom (definition (b)) would also fall under definition
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In passing, I read in a book this sentence "he took a strange joy in ..."
Do you think "strange" collocates nicely with "joy" ?
Also, would you concur with the author as to the use of the indefinite article in
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Hi.
1. I think I have asked a similar question as part of a thread but since I could not find it, I have decided to start a new thread. Let us try to adjectives like "vibrant" in front of the names of countries, cities and streets.
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
anonymous
183 days ago
Articles, Clauses, Gerunds, Definite Articles, Football, Adjectives, Writing, Countries, United States, Indefinite, Sports
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1. His death marked the end of an era.
There have been many eras. His death ended just one of them.
2. The circumstances of his death - which was to usher in an era of renewed upheaval across the Empire - were less than dignified.
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
cool breeze
256 days ago
Articles, Clauses, Adjectives, Writing, Animals, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Indefinite, Colours, Languages
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